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Review of supersync
Review of supersync









With a number of well-known Linux distros I already know that they're for the most part Open Source and non-proprietary with a few exceptions such as certain hardware drivers.

review of supersync

The last thing I want to have to do is to start wondering what non-audio trash, malware, adware, spyware and commercial proprietary code may or may not have slipped in from one day to the next. I mean, why couldn't you just have stuck with your Macs and iTunes to your heart's content and said the usual 5 daily prayers at the Apple Temple like the rest?įor the ones amongst us who like having our systems relatively clean it's not realistic to start from scratch to develop our own OS and application suites such as KX. It does beggar the question as to why you even bothered with Open Source and Linux in the first place if all you really wanted was to import proprietary code and payware doing who-knows-what into your systems.

review of supersync

If some of you choose not to understand such a glaringly obvious concept nor care that's fine, that's your business. also just happens to suck your data off your computer) developed for the i-Crowd into the few viable audio release / distribution systems we have going for us (KXStudio in particular) which have a long and known opensource development cycle involving people we know and trust and who created the code which forms the basis of why many of us switched to Linux in the first place, there is a problem. However, when a vendor jumps in from out of nowhere and first post informs us that he's planning to push his closed source proprietary non audio-production app (which. If the owner wants to sell his wares from his website and make a little promotion for it here that's fine too.

review of supersync

#Review of supersync install

I don't have an issue with nor care what people choose to install on their systems.









Review of supersync